Audience Research
Discover where your audience actually pays attention online using Rand Fishkin's behavioral intelligence methodology—beyond demographics to actionable media affinity data.
When to Use This Skill
Use this skill when you need to:
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Find where to reach your audience beyond Google and Facebook ads
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Discover podcasts, YouTube channels, and publications your audience follows
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Identify influencers and accounts with real audience overlap
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Plan PR and media outreach with data-backed target lists
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Improve ad targeting on YouTube, Meta, and other platforms
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Create content that resonates by understanding what your audience already engages with
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Find sponsorship and partnership opportunities with creators and publications
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Validate or challenge assumptions about your target market
This skill is particularly valuable for:
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Marketers who want to reach audiences beyond their current network
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PR professionals seeking hidden gem publications to pitch
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Content strategists planning distribution strategies
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Brands launching into new markets or segments
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Anyone tired of guessing where their audience hangs out
Methodology Foundation
Source: Rand Fishkin - SparkToro / Audience Intelligence methodology
Core Principle: Traditional market research (surveys, interviews) cannot reliably tell you where to reach audiences you don't already reach. Behavioral data—what people actually visit, read, watch, listen to, and follow—fills this gap at scale.
"Audience research has always been about what are the places where this audience pays attention. The beautiful thing about the web is it got way more granular."
What Claude Does vs What You Decide
Claude Does You Decide
Structures production workflow Final creative direction
Suggests technical approaches Equipment and tool choices
Creates templates and checklists Quality standards
Identifies best practices Brand/voice decisions
Generates script outlines Final script approval
What This Skill Does
When invoked, I will guide you through modern audience research:
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Define your audience query in behavioral terms
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Identify affinity data - websites, podcasts, YouTube, social accounts
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Analyze search behavior - keywords, questions, trending topics
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Extract self-description patterns - bio keywords, hashtags, skills
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Map the competitive landscape - who else reaches your audience
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Prioritize actionable channels for marketing, PR, content, ads
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Synthesize into problem-specific insights (not generic personas)
How to Use
Provide information about your target audience:
Example prompts:
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"Help me find where interior designers spend their time online"
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"I need to identify podcasts and YouTube channels for B2B SaaS marketers"
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"Research the online behaviors of sustainability-focused consumers"
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"Find hidden gem publications for pitching our fintech startup"
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"Discover influencers with real overlap to our developer audience"
Information that helps:
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Description of your target audience (role, industry, interests)
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Current assumptions about where they pay attention
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Competitors or comparable brands
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Marketing channels you've already tried
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Specific goals (PR outreach, content strategy, ad targeting, etc.)
Instructions
Phase 1: Define the Audience Query
Critical shift: Don't think in demographics—think in behaviors.
Wrong approach:
- "Marketing managers, 35-45, mid-size companies"
Right approach:
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"People who search for 'marketing automation tools'"
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"People who follow marketing thought leaders on LinkedIn"
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"People who listen to B2B marketing podcasts"
Query Formats:
Query Type Example Best For
Job role "Content marketers" B2B targeting
Interest "Sustainable fashion" Consumer markets
Search behavior "People who search 'CRM software'" Bottom-funnel intent
Social following "Followers of @HubSpot" Competitive intelligence
Website visitors "People who visit techcrunch.com" Media affinity
Phase 2: Gather Affinity Data
For your defined audience, identify:
Websites & Publications
What do they actually visit and read?
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Industry news sites
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Niche blogs
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Trade publications
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Community forums
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Educational resources
Podcasts
What do they listen to during commute/work?
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Industry-specific shows
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Thought leader interviews
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Educational content
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News and analysis
YouTube Channels
What do they watch and subscribe to?
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How-to content
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Industry commentary
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Product reviews
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Educational series
Social Accounts
Who do they follow and engage with?
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Thought leaders
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Industry experts
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Brand accounts
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Media personalities
Online Communities
Where do they participate?
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Subreddits
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Slack communities
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Discord servers
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Facebook groups
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LinkedIn groups
Phase 3: Analyze Search Behavior
Keywords They Search:
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What problems are they trying to solve?
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What solutions are they exploring?
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What questions do they ask?
Trending Topics:
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What's gaining attention in their space?
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What conversations are emerging?
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What content is getting shared?
Questions They Ask:
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What are the "how to" searches?
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What comparisons do they make?
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What concerns appear in searches?
Phase 4: Extract Self-Description Patterns
How do people in this audience describe themselves?
Bio Keywords:
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Job titles and roles
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Skills they highlight
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Industries they claim
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Causes they support
Hashtags They Use:
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Professional identifiers
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Community signals
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Interest markers
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Movement affiliations
Language Patterns:
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Jargon and terminology
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Values expressed
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Aspirations stated
Phase 5: Apply the Rhetorical Lens
Analyze why certain channels resonate using Aristotle's framework:
Logos (Logic)
Does this channel appeal through:
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Structured, evidence-backed thinking?
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Step-by-step instructions?
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Data and benchmarks?
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Clear methodology?
Implication: Your content for this channel should be logical, structured, and evidence-based.
Pathos (Emotion)
Does this channel connect through:
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Acknowledging audience struggles?
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Relatable failures before solutions?
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Urgency and empathy?
Implication: Your outreach should acknowledge real challenges and emotional stakes.
Ethos (Credibility)
Does this channel build trust through:
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Author credentials?
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Transparency about process?
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Practitioner experience?
Implication: Lead with credibility signals and real experience.
Phase 6: Competitive Landscape Mapping
Direct Competitors:
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Which of your competitors reach this audience?
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What channels are they present in?
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Where are they absent?
Media Competitors:
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Who produces content reaching your audience?
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What formats and topics resonate?
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Where are content gaps?
Opportunity Identification:
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Channels where competitors are NOT present
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Emerging channels with growing attention
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Underserved content topics
Phase 7: Synthesize Actionable Insights
Don't create generic personas. Instead, create problem-specific insights:
If Your Goal Is... Your Output Should Be...
PR outreach Prioritized list of publications + pitch angles
Content strategy Topics, formats, and distribution channels
Podcast advertising Ranked shows by audience overlap + listener size
YouTube ads Target channels + content themes
Influencer partnerships Accounts with authentic audience overlap
Community building Platforms where audience already gathers
Examples
Example 1: B2B SaaS Company (Project Management Software)
Audience Query: "People who search for project management tools" + "People who follow productivity thought leaders"
Affinity Data Discovered:
Category Top Findings Opportunity
Podcasts The PM Podcast, Scrum Master Toolbox, Manager Tools Sponsor or guest spots
YouTube Ali Abdaal, Thomas Frank, Notion channels Tutorial partnerships
Publications PM Times, Atlassian Blog, Harvard Business Review PR pitches, guest posts
Subreddits r/projectmanagement, r/agile, r/productivity Community engagement
Social Accounts @johncutlefish, @labornotebook, @shreyas Collaboration opportunities
Search Behavior:
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"Asana vs Monday vs [competitor]"
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"How to manage remote team projects"
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"Agile project management for small teams"
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"Project management for non-project managers"
Self-Description Patterns:
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"PM", "Scrum Master", "Product Owner"
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#agile, #projectmanagement, #remotework
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"Helping teams deliver"
Competitive Analysis:
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Asana: Heavy presence in productivity YouTube
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Monday.com: Strong podcast advertising
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ClickUp: Reddit engagement
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Opportunity: PM Times and trade publications underserved
Actionable Output:
For PR: Pitch PM Times and Scrum publications with thought leadership on hybrid team management—competitors underrepresent this angle.
For Content: Create comparison content ("X vs Y for specific use case") targeting search behavior. Distribute via PM subreddits.
For Ads: Target PM-focused YouTube channels (Thomas Frank for SMB, Notion channels for tech-forward). Avoid oversaturated productivity generalists.
Example 2: DTC Consumer Brand (Sustainable Home Goods)
Audience Query: "People interested in sustainable living" + "People who follow eco-conscious lifestyle accounts"
Affinity Data Discovered:
Category Top Findings Opportunity
Podcasts Conscious Chatter, Sustainably Influenced, The Minimalists Sponsor placements
YouTube Shelbizleee, Gittemary, Sustainably Vegan Product reviews/gifts
Publications Treehugger, The Good Trade, Ecocult PR features
Instagram @zerowastechef, @trashisfortossers, @sustainablychic Influencer partnerships
Subreddits r/zerowaste, r/buyitforlife, r/anticonsumption Authentic engagement
Search Behavior:
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"Sustainable alternatives to [product]"
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"Eco-friendly home goods"
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"How to reduce plastic in kitchen"
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"[Brand] reviews" for competitors
Self-Description Patterns:
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"Trying to live lighter", "Imperfect environmentalist"
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#sustainableliving, #consciousconsumer, #slowliving
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Values: Anti-greenwashing, authenticity, transparency
Rhetorical Analysis:
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Logos: r/buyitforlife is highly logic-driven (durability data, materials analysis). Content should be evidence-based.
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Pathos: Lifestyle influencers connect emotionally through "imperfect journey" framing. Avoid perfectionism.
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Ethos: Audience is skeptical of greenwashing. Transparency about supply chain = trust.
Actionable Output:
For PR: Lead with supply chain transparency story for The Good Trade. Avoid generic "eco-friendly" pitches—too many competitors.
For Influencer: Target mid-tier accounts (10-50K) who emphasize "imperfect sustainability." Avoid polished accounts—audience distrusts them.
For Content: Create "honest comparison" content for Reddit (r/zerowaste loves data-backed recommendations). Avoid promotional tone.
For Ads: Podcast sponsorship on Sustainably Influenced (aligned values) > generic lifestyle shows. Instagram ads targeting followers of mid-tier sustainable accounts.
Checklists & Templates
Audience Research Brief Template
PROJECT: [Client/Brand Name] DATE: [Date]
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AUDIENCE DEFINITION Primary audience description: Behavioral query: "People who [search/follow/visit]..." Secondary behavioral signals:
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RESEARCH GOALS What problem are we solving? [ ] Where to reach this audience (channels) [ ] What content resonates (topics/formats) [ ] Who influences them (accounts/publications) [ ] Competitive positioning (gaps/opportunities) [ ] Other: ___________
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AFFINITY DATA Websites/Publications:
Podcasts:
YouTube Channels:
Social Accounts:
Communities:
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SEARCH BEHAVIOR Top keywords: Top questions: Trending topics:
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SELF-DESCRIPTION Common bio keywords: Frequent hashtags: Values expressed:
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COMPETITIVE LANDSCAPE Competitors present in: Competitors absent from: Opportunities identified:
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ACTIONABLE RECOMMENDATIONS For [specific goal]: Priority channels: Key message angles: Tactical next steps:
Channel Evaluation Checklist
For each potential channel/publication/influencer:
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Audience overlap - Do they actually reach our target?
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Engagement quality - Is the audience active or passive?
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Competition presence - Are competitors already here?
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Access feasibility - Can we realistically get placement?
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Cost/effort ratio - What's the investment vs. reach?
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Brand alignment - Does association fit our positioning?
Rhetorical Analysis Grid
Channel Logos (Logic) Pathos (Emotion) Ethos (Credibility) Our Approach
[Channel 1] High/Med/Low High/Med/Low High/Med/Low [How to match]
[Channel 2]
[Channel 3]
Skill Boundaries
What This Skill Does Well
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Structuring audio production workflows
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Providing technical guidance
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Creating quality checklists
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Suggesting creative approaches
What This Skill Cannot Do
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Replace audio engineering expertise
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Make subjective creative decisions
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Access or edit audio files directly
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Guarantee commercial success
References
Primary Source:
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Rand Fishkin, SparkToro methodology and thought leadership
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Tommy Walker, "You've Done the Audience Research... Now What?"
Additional Resources:
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SparkToro Blog: sparktoro.com/blog
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Lost and Founder by Rand Fishkin (startup/marketing lessons)
Tools:
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SparkToro (audience intelligence platform)
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Social listening tools (Brandwatch, Mention, etc.)
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SEO tools for search behavior (Ahrefs, SEMrush)
Related Skills
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buyer-personas - Deeper dive into buyer decision-making process
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competitive-analysis - Broader competitive intelligence framework
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content-strategy - How to create content once you know where audience is
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jobs-to-be-done - Understanding why audiences seek solutions
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positioning-dunford - Differentiating based on audience insights